Rambles
Mame
As I am still getting to know my recent acquisition, I discovered that the trunk's "surface flare" is actually a knuckle that resulted from grafting and that the trunk narrows down again below the surface. There is about a 1.5" space from where the roots are to where I would like them.
"No prob, Bob! Just groundlayer it!" you say?
Any other deciduous I would in a heartbeat, but a couple things here gave me pause and I wanted to run it by others:
Ground-layering at graft scar: the widest point of the trunk looks like it was either the site of a big cut early on, or more likely, a pretty nice whip graft. Some of the stock tissue extends above where I would want the nebari. Is this ok, or would it be ill advised?
Girdle vs Tourniquet vs ?: Most of the ground layering I've done has been girdling higher up on trunks. Considering that there isn't much space between the current roots and when I want them, and that ginkgos are supposedly slow to heal, would twisting a wire below the bulge and waiting a couple of years be a better choice? I've seen references to creating an injury that you keep open until roots form. Is that a viable route?
If you use the tourniquet, when, and do you still use rooting compound?
Picture available shortly.
"No prob, Bob! Just groundlayer it!" you say?
Any other deciduous I would in a heartbeat, but a couple things here gave me pause and I wanted to run it by others:
Ground-layering at graft scar: the widest point of the trunk looks like it was either the site of a big cut early on, or more likely, a pretty nice whip graft. Some of the stock tissue extends above where I would want the nebari. Is this ok, or would it be ill advised?
Girdle vs Tourniquet vs ?: Most of the ground layering I've done has been girdling higher up on trunks. Considering that there isn't much space between the current roots and when I want them, and that ginkgos are supposedly slow to heal, would twisting a wire below the bulge and waiting a couple of years be a better choice? I've seen references to creating an injury that you keep open until roots form. Is that a viable route?
If you use the tourniquet, when, and do you still use rooting compound?
Picture available shortly.